July 3rd, 2008
Link • Awards, Poems • 4 Comments
BUOY
And so you came to realize that a married man
is like a drowning victim, when you find himdrenched, adrift and unhappy in the vast ocean
of his marriage. And you are always the firstto spot him, a floating speck on the horizon,
flapping his arms for rescue, desperate mouthringing an o above the rolling crests and waves.
You on the high dry deck of the cruise shipin your espadrilles and crisp white shorts,
aren’t you the beacon, aren’t you the life preserver.And when you jump into the sea salt foam,
if only for a refreshing swim, you understandthat he will seize upon you, strong buoyant
swimmer that you are, grab your shoulders,pull your head under with his weight, so dense
in the water. And down among the reefsand coral, with your new copper-coin eyes,
you will see then how he rides on the shouldersof his water-breathing sea horse wife,
and his mermaid mistresses, those water nymphformer lovers, and whole tag-team pyramid
of three-breasted women who have triedover the years to save him. Even then,
next time, when you see another onego under, does it give you pause,
does it stop you from jumping in—no, not once, not ever.
